Feb. 9, 2016, 9:56 p.m.

Donald Trump basked in his first election victory Tuesday night in the New Hampshire primary, striding onstage to the Beatles’ rock anthem “Revolution” and exclaiming to cheering supporters: “Oh, wow! Wow. Wow. Wow. So beautiful. So beautiful.”

“I am going to be the greatest jobs president that God ever created,” the New York billionaire told a banquet hall crammed with hundreds of supporters. “Remember that.”

“USA! USA! USA!” his supporters chanted over and over, along with “Trump! Trump! Trump!”

Former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore is still kicking. The last-place candidate received 118 votes in the Granite State —roughly the same number as former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who dropped out of the race last week — with 81% of precincts reporting.

Will he drop out?

"That is a decision that we will assess, not tonight," Gilmore said in an interview with The Times on Tuesday three hours after polls closed. "We obviously did run as hard as we could in the state of New Hampshire. At the end of the day the exclusion from the debates was critical."

Feb. 9, 2016, 8:23 p.m.

San Antonio Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich was not happy to hear the winners of the New Hampshire primary.

The five-time world champion coach is known to be a little grumpy during in-game interviews, but he perked up a little when reporter David Aldridge asked Tuesday night if he wanted to know the winners.

Feb. 9, 2016, 7:58 p.m.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz noted that he’s currently in third place in New Hampshire’s primary, while speaking to supporters at a campaign rally in Hollis, N.H.

“That was the result all of us were told was impossible,” he said. “Together we have done what the pundits and the media said could not be done, and what the Washington establishment desperately hoped would not be done.”

Cruz reminded his supporters that the same naysayers also wrongly predicted he’d lose Iowa.

The New Jersey governor said he and his wife, MaryPat, would go home to New Jersey for the first time in two weeks. They plan to "take a deep breath [and] see what the final results are tonight, because that matters."

"We want to see exactly what happens," Christie said, as Twitter went nuts with posts saying he was "out" of the race.